Happy holidays! The blog is on winter break (it needs to catch up on its reading and writing too, you know*). We'll see you back in January!
*What would that look like - a blog on winter break, reading and writing? Would it only be doing this in an abstract manner, or would it take some human (or other animal) form? Would it give itself a first name?
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Winter Break Writing Prompts
It’s nearly winter break, and you
are probably feeling overwhelmed, overworked, and as overdone as a turkey left
too long in the oven (are Thanksgiving jokes [can that be called a “joke?”]
allowed in December?). Winter break. Concentrate on it. It is nearly within
reach.
And this blog post, perhaps you’ve
guessed already, you clever person, is about making the most of break. Because,
yes, you do need sleep. And yes, it’s a good idea to catch up on Orange is the New Black (I just goggled
popular TV shows for 2013 and picked the one I’ve seen, ha. What good TV are
you watching? Leave the title in the comments). You’ll be baking, maybe, or traveling; celebrating with family and catching up on reading (what are you
reading? Leave titles in the comments. I just finished Maddaddam. Oryx and Crake
was better).
But listen. Find the time to write.
Choose a time every day, give yourself space, peace. Write. It doesn’t matter
what you write, only that you do. Only that you use this time of relative
freedom to pour yourself onto the page.
If you know me, you know I don’t
really believe in writer’s block. If you can’t find something to write, you can
always revise, but writing prompts are also great. Here, have a few (leave more
in the comments section – look, this is an interactive blog for the holidays,
okay? Get involved in the conversation).
1.
Write an argument between two characters that
begins at the dinner table.
2.
What wouldn’t you trade for anything in the world?
Why.
3.
Describe sound (music, quiet, the ringing in
your ears; an important concert, festival, or show; your baby’s voice, your
mother’s voice, your lover’s voice).
4.
Write a lyric essay as a how to guide. How to
garden. How to let go of someone. How to get through grad school. How to drive
yourself crazy.
5.
What does the concept of time mean to you? Can
you demonstrate the effect of time through two characters interacting? Through
dialogue? Through a series of memories?
6.
Get all DFW and write a piece with a
proliferation of footnotes. What goes in the story/essay/poem, and what goes in
footnotes. Why?
7.
Start a piece at the end and work backwards.
Begin, as they say, with a bang (literal or otherwise). Start as big as you
can.
8.
What do you know more about than anyone else,
like ever? Write a piece explaining this. Demonstrate how this knowledge has
been transformative (or not).
9.
What would you change about yourself if you
could? Would you be the same person with a different face, voice, or set of
life circumstances?
10. Go all
“Hills like White Elephants.” How much can you reveal through dialogue and
character action? How true can you stay to the third person objective point of
view? What is lost in this exercise. What is gained.
So.
Hopefully one of these will speak to you. And if they don’t, google writing
prompts, buy a writing prompt book (like the cool little book The Writer’s Block). Hold a reading.
Invite me to it! Inspire and encourage each other. Inspire and encourage
yourself. You have something important to say. Write it.
Mary Sheffield (MR Sheffield, as she prefers) is FAU's English Graduate Advisor. Email her with questions about the program (msheffi3@fau.edu). Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Pank, Fiction Southeast, The Florida Review, and other publications. She is getting married in ten days.
Monday, November 25, 2013
The Power of Observation
In his foreword to The Best American Essays 2012, editor Robert Atwan has some interesting commentary about today’s creative nonfiction students. He writes, “They apparently believe that when they write an essay—whether it’s required or inspired—they should write about themselves. An essay for many of them is wholly autobiographical, pure and simple.”
He goes on to ask why: “Could it be that many students don’t know enough, don’t have favorite artists, composers, books? Or have no passion for anything outside themselves and their own microculture? Or could it be that today’s young writers are afraid to tackle subjects that are presumably for experts? In other words, that they believe that an explication of [an artist’s] artistic genius could only be set forth by someone with a PhD in American art history? Are students so intimidated by expertise that they’ve lost confidence in their own powers of observation?”
Wow. A bit harsh, perhaps, but given his position as editor of The Best American Essays, and the fact that he actually founded that publication in 1986, and he has written for The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, the Boston Review, and the Atlantic Monthly AND has done many other things there isn’t time to mention here, I’m inclined to believe him. Atwan is talking about MFA students specifically, but one can assume his comments that show favor for the topic-oriented essay would apply to writers in general. It’s not hard to imagine him issuing the same admonition to any writer of nonfiction.
Of course, Atwan is not the only one who would like to see less focus on the personal and more focus on topics or subjects other than the writer’s life. In an essay on this very subject, poet Nancy Kuhl sees the current popularity of personal writing as a result of a common assumption that “writing is primarily a means of self-expression, as opposed to a craft or a creative discipline.” She argues that many students—she draws on her own as examples—see writing as therapeutic, and as such they think it matters more how the writer grows through the process of writing than how the reader is affected by the work or how it is evaluated according to literary standards.
I think some writers might be tempted to believe the same thing: that writing is about expressing the inner self, it’s healing. Kuhl herself points out that yes, writing can be healing and surely is therapeutic, but she quickly follows that by saying healing and therapy are not the point and certainly not the main goal of writing. And yet, still, the notion of finding one’s self with words persists. Perhaps this accepted notion of writing as self-expression is what drives nonfiction students toward the personal essay. Perhaps it is what increasingly drives professional writers toward it as well, including myself.
Let me be clear: I do not have anything against the personal essay. I’ve written a lot of them, and I’ve read a lot them, and I really like a lot them. But I agree with Atwan and Kuhl that students—and by extension all writers of nonfiction—should not see nonfiction as limited to the personal essay alone. If writers have strayed away from the art of essaying that, as Atwan defines it, is “the trying out of, or fooling around with, ideas and observations,” and if those essays are largely without the kind of substance readers need, then yes, we have a problem here. If people are writing primarily for self-expression or therapy, as Kuhl suggests, and not to offer others a new way of viewing the world or a new understanding or insight into something, then yes, we might be misunderstanding the purpose of writing.
I think that, overall, a return to ideas and observations will bolster nonfiction’s reputation and quality. I would like to see more topic essays and more narrative journalism in the realm of nonfiction, as would Kuhl and Atwan. I want to see nonfiction writers exploring the lives of others or topics that aren’t their own lives more often, because I think writers are allowed to exercise their powers of research, observation, and truth-sifting in more fruitful ways when they are evaluating others, not themselves.
Atwan questions whether today’s MFA students are brave or skilled enough to essay. Are we confident in our own powers of observation? Can we tackle the big topics? Can we find a more universal truth than the truth as we’ve lived it individually? Those are the questions I’ll leave you with, and I hope you find that yes, you do discover and relish the power in your own observations.
Stephanie Anderson is a first-year MFA candidate in creative nonfiction. She holds a bachelor of arts degree in English from Augustana College in Sioux Falls. Stephanie has worked as a journalist for a farm newspaper, and then as a writer and photographer for an international humanitarian aid organization, a job that took her to developing countries around the world. Her work has been published in The Chronicle Review, SCOPE Magazine, and Farm and Ranch Living. She lives in Boca Raton with her husband, Ryan.
He goes on to ask why: “Could it be that many students don’t know enough, don’t have favorite artists, composers, books? Or have no passion for anything outside themselves and their own microculture? Or could it be that today’s young writers are afraid to tackle subjects that are presumably for experts? In other words, that they believe that an explication of [an artist’s] artistic genius could only be set forth by someone with a PhD in American art history? Are students so intimidated by expertise that they’ve lost confidence in their own powers of observation?”
Wow. A bit harsh, perhaps, but given his position as editor of The Best American Essays, and the fact that he actually founded that publication in 1986, and he has written for The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, the Boston Review, and the Atlantic Monthly AND has done many other things there isn’t time to mention here, I’m inclined to believe him. Atwan is talking about MFA students specifically, but one can assume his comments that show favor for the topic-oriented essay would apply to writers in general. It’s not hard to imagine him issuing the same admonition to any writer of nonfiction.
Of course, Atwan is not the only one who would like to see less focus on the personal and more focus on topics or subjects other than the writer’s life. In an essay on this very subject, poet Nancy Kuhl sees the current popularity of personal writing as a result of a common assumption that “writing is primarily a means of self-expression, as opposed to a craft or a creative discipline.” She argues that many students—she draws on her own as examples—see writing as therapeutic, and as such they think it matters more how the writer grows through the process of writing than how the reader is affected by the work or how it is evaluated according to literary standards.
I think some writers might be tempted to believe the same thing: that writing is about expressing the inner self, it’s healing. Kuhl herself points out that yes, writing can be healing and surely is therapeutic, but she quickly follows that by saying healing and therapy are not the point and certainly not the main goal of writing. And yet, still, the notion of finding one’s self with words persists. Perhaps this accepted notion of writing as self-expression is what drives nonfiction students toward the personal essay. Perhaps it is what increasingly drives professional writers toward it as well, including myself.
Let me be clear: I do not have anything against the personal essay. I’ve written a lot of them, and I’ve read a lot them, and I really like a lot them. But I agree with Atwan and Kuhl that students—and by extension all writers of nonfiction—should not see nonfiction as limited to the personal essay alone. If writers have strayed away from the art of essaying that, as Atwan defines it, is “the trying out of, or fooling around with, ideas and observations,” and if those essays are largely without the kind of substance readers need, then yes, we have a problem here. If people are writing primarily for self-expression or therapy, as Kuhl suggests, and not to offer others a new way of viewing the world or a new understanding or insight into something, then yes, we might be misunderstanding the purpose of writing.
I think that, overall, a return to ideas and observations will bolster nonfiction’s reputation and quality. I would like to see more topic essays and more narrative journalism in the realm of nonfiction, as would Kuhl and Atwan. I want to see nonfiction writers exploring the lives of others or topics that aren’t their own lives more often, because I think writers are allowed to exercise their powers of research, observation, and truth-sifting in more fruitful ways when they are evaluating others, not themselves.
Atwan questions whether today’s MFA students are brave or skilled enough to essay. Are we confident in our own powers of observation? Can we tackle the big topics? Can we find a more universal truth than the truth as we’ve lived it individually? Those are the questions I’ll leave you with, and I hope you find that yes, you do discover and relish the power in your own observations.
Stephanie Anderson is a first-year MFA candidate in creative nonfiction. She holds a bachelor of arts degree in English from Augustana College in Sioux Falls. Stephanie has worked as a journalist for a farm newspaper, and then as a writer and photographer for an international humanitarian aid organization, a job that took her to developing countries around the world. Her work has been published in The Chronicle Review, SCOPE Magazine, and Farm and Ranch Living. She lives in Boca Raton with her husband, Ryan.
Monday, November 18, 2013
The Essential Truth: Blurring the Lines of Creative Non-Fiction
Blurred Lines
I send my brother a piece of my writing. It’s about us- something that happened a while ago, a moment from a time I assumed he wouldn’t remember, but that I had held onto tightly. He ponders it over for a few days, then he calls me to discuss…
“I read the story you sent, and it was extremely well
written (why thank you, dear brother),
but I had to read it three times, because I specifically remember that experience,
and my set of memories seems to color things differently, so I think I'm
overlaying things I remember with things you didn’t necessarily remember or
feel, but the way it was written definitely evokes a feeling of anxiety.”
Did I blur the boundaries too much? Or was that my goal? Is my writing meant to only be “gotten” or
“understood” by me? Am I that
selfish? Probably. But I also think that the way we as writers
“color” things, as my brother so eloquently put it, can be an elegant method to
fill our stories. Writing is an art -
we’re making things beautiful. It works
the same way it did in kindergarten when your neighbor might have colored the dog
blue and you colored it beige or brown.
Your five-year-old self might have scoffed, but the dog can be blue if
it appears as such to them.
The essential truth, however, the “anxiety” that my brother
felt when reading, was the main point I was trying to capture in the piece, and
how it comes across is always going to be based on the reader’s perspective. It is the responsibility of a writer to
illustrate emotion on a page, while the reader is entrusted with interpretation.
A good friend once told me, “Everything is perception.” It is our passion to paint pictures for
people, but we can still craft a portrait that someone might color differently
because of their experiences, opinions, and feelings. If everything is undeniably about our insight,
then we must have faith in our readers to make the leaps between our lyric
essays, discern our extended metaphors, and understand all of our undertones,
no matter what shade they choose to look through. And as for staying inside the lines, it may
be the right thing to do, but so much beauty comes from our flaws, our
inability to stay inside our specific genres, and our need to blur boundaries
so we can lose ourselves in pages and pages of colorful splendor.
Brittany Ackerman is a second semester graduate student
studying for her MFA in creative non-fiction. It is her first semester
teaching English Composition, and so far she loves it. Aside from
reading, writing, and now grading papers, she does ballet and enjoys baking
treats. She has a mean recipe for a cookie dough filled cupcake!
Yum. She is also a Disney enthusiast and travels often to the
magical theme parks worldwide.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
On Finding Our Voice
We may squeak
when we mean to roar. No, first year GTAs are not of mice, we are of the genus panthera
leo, also known as
the lion, ferociously testing out our roar, or more accurately, timidly testing
out our roar while clad in an armor of bravado.
And if that’s
the way we do it for the first few weeks, it’s okay, because soon our
faux-poise solidifies, and materializes into the real deal. And then one day, a
few weeks in, we find that, yeah, we’re teaching, but more than that, we’re teachers, and even more than that, we’re
teachers with something to say. Yeah.
So what do we do
with this roar we’ve discovered? We’re molding young impressionable minds, we
don’t want to be sliding down some weird slippery slope with this powerful roar
of ours. Because opening up to us is this dawning realization that yes, we are
the masters of our domain, and yes, we have this captive audience, a captive audience, who have to sit there. So as we realize the
power of that roar, we must also know that, à la Superman, it must only be used
for good.
There’s no doubt
about it, teachers, like the rest of the population, come with a wide range of
opinions and biases, loves and hates and weird-ass convictions. We are all
passionate about something or another. Some of us even have wacky off-the-wall
idiosyncrasies that we perhaps might feel free to espouse to those glowing,
fresh-faced, sometimes malleable young minds in front of us. (Yes, there are
one or two in the bunch.) So how much sharing can we freely do before it starts
getting weird?
It’s definitely
a balancing act. When I think back on the favorite teachers I’ve had over the
years, the ones that shared bits and pieces about themselves made it easier to
connect with them, while the selective nature of their bits and pieces made me
wish I knew just a little bit more. With the over-sharers, on the other hand,
it seemed like the entire class knew just a tad more than we all really wanted
to know. It’s something I’m still deciphering – how much is too much? (In fact,
I just had to edit this paragraph to remove stories about two professors – one
a bits-and-piecer, and one an over-sharer. So, okay, I tend towards the
over-sharing, but not so much that my students are rolling their eyes.
Hopefully.)
In short, yes,
it will get weird if you tell your students about the time you saw a UFO when
you were nine and although the rest of your family saw it too, they all walked
away and pretended that nothing happened as if they’d somehow all been hypnotized.
Or share your opinion about how the NRA is a blight akin to the Bubonic Plague
and need to be kneecapped before they
wipe out 30-60% of the population (citation needed). Or divulge your theory
that cats are evil and out for world domination and are just lulling us into a
false sense of security with their carefully
orchestrated and deceptively cute
lolcat memes.
Yes, it’s a
balancing act, and we all violate our own self-imposed code at some point or
another, but then we can go home, eat some gummi bears and watch Jon Stewart,
and start afresh the next class period. (See what I mean about over-sharing?)